No. The output of the controller goes to the Squelch-Gate card, and 
through the several stages of audio amplification there before going 
on to the exciter. Since that was the way Motorola designed it, it 
seemed like the best way to keep it.

Cheers,

Army 

--- In [email protected], "skipp025" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> 
wrote:
> Your driving the transmitter directly from 
> your repeater controller..? ... using the 
> back plane method? 
> 
> Sounds like your repeater controller tx output 
> doesn't have enough drive power (capacity) to 
> directly drive the tx channel element IDC 
> (channel element modulator circuit). 
> 
> Cheers, 
> 
> skipp 
> www.radiowrench.com 
> 
> 
> > "Army Curtis" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > Well gang, I have a real interesting problem for you that's 
about to
> > drive me nuts.
> > 
> > I have a MSR-2000 repeater that I'm putting into the 2M ham band.
> This
> > is one of the radios removed from service by the Ontario 
Provincial
> > Police, so it is a Canadian Motorola VHF low split, originally
> > transmitting at 141.xxx.
> > 
> > Following the suggestions on the Repeater-Builder web site, I 
have
> > converted it to a ham style controller (CAT-700). The radio tunes
> up per
> > the book, with all meter readings very nominal, and it makes full
> power
> > (100 watts) easily.
> > 
> > Here's the issue... it will not deviate the transmitter more than
> about
> > 2.7 KHz using a 1 KHz tone before it starts severely distorting. 
The
> > problem appears to be in the exciter, which is a TLD9241A. There 
is
> a
> > sticker on the exciter shelf that says 0.260 volts = 5 KHz
> deviation.
> > Anytime I put more than about 0.140 volts into the exciter, it
> starts to
> > distort. I am using an IFR-1200S to send and receive the 1KHz 
tone,
> and
> > I'm looking at the wave form of the transmitted signal on the
> 1200S. I
> > have verified the 1200S is clean by looking at its output on 
another
> > service monitor, and it is very clean to beyond 6 KHz deviation. 
I
> have
> > looked at the audio going into the exciter on a scope, and it is
> very
> > clean to up around 0.400 volts, so I would say that the receiver,
> > controller audio, and transmit audio up to the exciter input is 
not
> the
> > problem.
> > 
> > I tried changing the exciter to another identical board, same
> problem. I
> > changed the channel element to a known good element, same 
problem. I
> > have changed the audio input transistor on the exciter board 
(Q501),
> > same problem. I have tried to adjust the IDC on the channel 
element.
> > While it does change the deviation, it has no effect on the
> distortion.
> > 
> > Here is some additional info I just ran down to the shop to 
check.
> > Sending a 5 KHz deviation at 1 KHz signal into the IFR1200S from
> another
> > service monitor shows no distortion, so no problem there. 
Putting an
> > audio generator right on the audio input to the exciter shows the
> same
> > issue, but here is where it gets interesting. Changing the audio
> > frequency, I am seeing a definite pre-emphasis network somewhere 
in
> the
> > exciter, as a tone of 1 KHz gives about 2.7 KHz deviation, but a
> tone of
> > 3.2 KHz gives right at 5 KHz deviation, with NO distortion. 
> > 
> > So, here's my question. I always thought you set deviation on an 
FM
> > transmitter using a 1 KHz tone, setting a maximum deviation of
> about 4.5
> > KHz. I can see with this exciter that doing that will result in 
much
> > more than 5 KHz deviation at frequencies above 1 KHz. Yet the
> Motorola
> > book calls for setting the deviation to 5 KHz using a 1 KHz 
tone. 
> > 
> > What am I missing here?  
> > 
> > Army - AE5P
> > Nacogdoches, the oldest town in Texas





 
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